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Author Topic: Tradition: ever young, ever new  (Read 407 times)

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Offline Nishant

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Tradition: ever young, ever new
« on: February 03, 2013, 12:55:58 AM »
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  • http://sspx.org/pastors_corner/pastors_corner_february_2013.htm#tradition

    5th Sunday of January:
    Sexagesima Sunday

    "In the wake of the huge anti-abortion rally (40 years after Roe v. Wade), Washington Post reporter, Ashley McGuire, warned the world that the Catholic youth are becoming more traditional in all areas of their faith and culture in an article entitled “The new (old) Catholic Church”. She comments that today’s new fad is to go back to the eternal Church - teaching and praying. We provide here some pertinent excerpts from her important observation.[1]

    We must thank God, but above all pray for this new generation (who the reporter calls “millenials”), that it may fully recognize and return to sanity by embracing the fullness of the Catholic Faith as contained in Tradition. This complete conversion of the heart is truly the work of God at its most intimate plane.

    [Extracts from The Washington Post]

    My generation of Catholics, men and women in their 20s and 30s, inherited a suffocating spiritual ennui inside the church and a culture of death, promiscuity, sadness, and fear outside her doors. We were born into a world where millions of babies die of abortion annually, where countless more unborn babies are suspended silently in freezers, where we are told gender is random and marriage is amorphous and dissolvable. We inherited hell on earth.

    Some Catholics, like myself, are converts away from Protestantism, recognizing that the only institution in the world that has stood firm through the millennia on the most important social issues of the day is the Catholic Church. Others grew up with rogue nuns, priests making up the liturgy, sex-abuse scandals, squishy bishops, etc. And we’ve had enough.

    But this is the time of “The Great Catholic Awakening”: is a revival of Catholic orthodoxy among youth in the Catholic Church. Rather than walk away and embrace the hedonistic culture outside the church’s doors, we paused. We paused and turned around. We planted our feet firmly, and we stayed. Our numbers are small but we are true to church teaching and there is no denying that we are growing. More conservative religious orders, for examples, are growing with young Catholics seeking a traditional religious life.

    Young men entering seminary today are coming out of a secular culture and have often made a counter-cultural choice to be Catholic. Our house is receiving more vocations than at any time since the 1960’s, and the men entering tend to be strongly supportive of the teachings of Pope Benedict XVI. They are interested in the recovery of more traditional forms of Christian belief and practice. (Dominican House of Studies, Fr. White)

    They’re more attracted to a traditional style of religious life, where there is community living, common prayer, having Mass together, praying the Liturgy of the Hours together. They are much more likely to say fidelity to the church is important to them. And they really are looking for communities where members wear habits. (Georgetown University, research center, Sr. Mary Bendyna)

    The National Catholic Reporter, a left-leaning “Catholic” publication[3] admitted, “To put all this into a sound-bite, the next generation of religious will be more ethnically diverse and more traditional.” That diversity will include a large amount of Hispanics (40% of the Catholics their age). Young lay Catholics are returning to tradition as well. Mass attendance has been in a general state of decline among all age groups except among millennials,[2] who have demonstrated a nearly ten percent increase in Mass attendance in recent years.  Not only are young Catholics increasingly more likely to attend Mass, they prefer more traditional practices and forms of the Mass. Fr. Fields, S.J. said: “My assumption is that, in a world of constant [noise], [young people] find that the contemplative silence of the Extraordinary Form nourishes their lives of prayer.” Put more simply: We want less Kumbaya. More Panis Angelicus.

    Young Catholics are also increasingly more open to and obedient to church teachings on moral issues such as contraception, abortion, and marriage. A study conducted in its wake at the Ethics and Public Policy Center found that the number of young practicing Catholic women (ages 18-34) who fully accept the church’s teaching on contraception is more than double that of their older female peers. Recently, Catholics have come under increasing pressure to comply with laws that violate their beliefs. But young Catholics, lay and religious, defy that trend, suggesting that the culture wars are far from over."
    "Never will anyone who says his Rosary every day become a formal heretic ... This is a statement I would sign in my blood." St. Montfort, Secret of the Rosary. I support the FSSP, the SSPX and other priests who work for the restoration of doctrinal orthodoxy and liturgical orthopraxis in the Church. I accept Vatican II if interpreted in the light of Tradition and canonisations as an infallible declaration that a person is in Heaven. Sedevacantism is schismatic and Ecclesiavacantism is heretical.